Amid Gold’s 'Familiar' Range, Comes A $1,600 Forecast

 | Sep 27, 2019 11:27

There is a deja-vu feeling now in gold—like a seen-it, done-it kind of thing.

The longs in the market are kind of resigned to the notion that both gold futures and bullion will remain trapped in the $1,500 to $1,550 per ounce range for a while—though they would like to see even higher prices, of course.

Short-sellers, meanwhile, have bets that the market will slide to $1,480, and subsequently touch $1,420, if it breaks next major support at $1,450.

Despite such optimism, like gold longs, some of them suspect that $1,500-$1,550 will be the range to crack.

Enters Canadian banking group TD and its projection for $1,600 gold.

In a note on Wednesday, the group’s broking arm, TD Securities, laid out its case on why the market could gain nearly $100 more from where it stood—despite some believing that the U.S. Federal Reserve was done with rate cuts for this year, after just two modest easings in July and September.

Look At Bond Yields For Now, Not At Fed/h3

For those seeking greater clarity on gold, TD tells them to look not in the Fed’s direction for now, but at plunging U.S. bond yields, that investors have fled from most of this year toward safe-havens—like the yellow metal.

TD’s Head of Commodity Strategy Bart Melek, a renowned metals analyst, said:

“Some 15 trillion dollars worth of investment grade paper is yielding negatively and there is downside pressure on U.S. rates as investors aggressively seek yield.
The global economy is slowing, weighed down by trade and recent tightening, with Germany only one quarter worth of data away from a technical recession—a U.S.-China 'deal or no deal' notwithstanding.
It is also likely that after beating expectations since late-June, we are likely at a local maximum as markets have likely adjusted their expectations too positively and we are now due for disappointments on the data front.”

Fundamentals Show $1,600 Gold In The Cards/h3

While gold longs will do good to ignore the Fed’s mixed signals on inflation and the economy, disappointing data could still push the growth-sensitive U.S. central bank into cutting rates again at the year-end and beyond.

TD Securities added:

“The fundamentals point to firming gold. $1,600 gold in the cards once focus shifts from headlines to fundamentals.”

In Thursday’s session, gold futures for December delivery settled up $2.90, or 0.2%, at $1,515.20 per ounce on the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange.

Spot gold, reflective of trades in bullion, hovered at $1,503.

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